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- Nov 20, 2019
I don't have much faith that Snyder will create a film that functions on that level thematically, beyond Arthur posing with Excalibur and being revered by the rest of the cast. And in this era of #MeTooism, all of the earthiness and non-PC passion that made Boorman's movie memorable will be stripped out and the cast will act and think just like 21st Century Progressives.
Funny you say that, because the last two major theatrical movies about king Arthur pretty much ignore the "Elephant in the room" about the Camelot legends, that is the afair between Lancelot and Guinevere, who did that aware and willingly of their betrayal, that was the starting point for the fall of Camelot's dream.
The 2004 Clive Owen King Arthur doesn't even try to get close to the legends, on that movie Arthur is a Roman officier that joins the Britains afetr he finds out his mother is one of them. And Guinevere is just another generic warrior lady that we have seen so many times before.
The 2017 Guy Ritchie King Arthur doesn't even have Guinevere and Lancelot. Ritchie pretty much took the characters from Snatch and Two Smoking Barrels and put them in a medieval fantasy. Arthur grew up in a whore-house as "one of the blokes, eh!". Also, by the end of that movie Excalibur turns into the thunder cats sword or some shit and Arthur does animu fight. It was fun.
So I wonder if Zack Snyder, or his producers, will even bother with some of the most difficult parts of the Arthurian legends, but Lancelot's and Guinevere betrayal is important for the drama, because it puts Arthur in the most difficult position possible for him, he is the king and he must uphold justice no matter what (in this case, death to both of them), but as a man he doesn't want to see his beloved and best friend die, but the crown is on his head, and he made the rules as well. This is much MUCH more dificult to Arthur than to fight a invading army, or Morgana or whatever.
And That's because when Thomas Mallory was compiling these legends, he must have been aware that the drama of this love triangle is the the key component for it's climax and what would deliver these characters into legends.
But nah, Sir Thomas Mallory should have been aware that his depiction of Guinevere would have been deemed "problematic" over 600 hundreds years later on twitter, and now he is a shitlord nazi trying to slut shame Guinevere, yikes...
#cancelThomasMallory
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